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Heijstra, Thamar Melanie; Pétursdóttir, Gyða Margrét – Teaching Sociology, 2023
Creating a positive classroom experience for students can be a challenge, especially when teaching a contested topic such as gender studies. Teaching and learning gender is teaching and learning against the grain, which can lead to feelings of comfort and discomfort among students. The objective is to capture different manifestations of…
Descriptors: Gender Issues, Course Evaluation, Resistance (Psychology), Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Karyn McKinney Marvasti – Teaching Sociology, 2025
This article is a constructively self-critical autoethnography of my evolving identity as an instructor in a race and ethnicity course. I supplement and contextualize my self-reflections with data in the form of comments from student evaluations. I begin by considering how my social location mediates class dynamics. I then present comments from…
Descriptors: White Teachers, Racism, Race, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Óscar F. Gil-García; Büsra Sati; Justin M. Martin; Luz F. Velazquez – Teaching Sociology, 2024
Conversations surrounding decolonial humanistic sociology have been guided by a moral imperative--to advance a radical critique of society for the purpose of reducing inequality. Storytelling has been used by marginalized groups to advance decolonization. Exactly how can instructors use the power of storytelling and maps to facilitate the study of…
Descriptors: Decolonization, Humanism, Teaching Methods, Global Approach
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Stough-Hunter, Anjel; Lekies, Kristi S. – Teaching Sociology, 2023
Rural and first-generation students face unique challenges to accessing and persisting through college. While there is increasing literature on how to better serve first-generation college students, rural first-generation students have received far less attention. By associating student experiences with key concepts such as social groups, social…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Rural Areas, Sociology, Self Concept
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Susan Prentice; Lindsey McKay; Trina McKellep – Teaching Sociology, 2024
To what degree is explicit care/work policy taught in family courses in Canada's leading research-intensive universities? We analyze family courses in sociology departments and in political studies and women's/gender studies programs in Canada's 15 R1 universities to make a contribution to the scholarship of teaching and learning. This national…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Research Universities, Course Content, Content Analysis
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Merrill, Monica – Teaching Sociology, 2022
Sociology curricula often house a variety of "hot button" or contentious topics (e.g., race relations, crime and deviance, personal freedoms/choice, gender). While departments may be giving more attention to ensuring that these topics are included in their curriculum, here I argue that we also need to engage students in reflection about…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Sociology, Social Problems, Emotional Response
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Samantha Nousak; Leanne Barry; Susan R. Fisk – Teaching Sociology, 2024
Statistical literacy is critical for all sociology students because it facilitates academic and professional success, high-paying jobs, and informed citizenship. Most students, however, lack adequate statistical literacy to engage with sociological research. Within that general deficit, there are gender, racial, and social-class differences, with…
Descriptors: Sociology, Statistics, Literacy, Social Science Research
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Fox, Katherine E. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
The Alien Worlds project teaches ethnographic skills using the societies of dystopian, postapocalyptic, and science fiction texts as imagined field sites and targets for analysis. These exercises and assignments, which illustrate principles of qualitative fieldwork, were developed when COVID-19 precautions made it impossible to assign tasks that…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Ethnography, Science Fiction, Sociology
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Hartless, Jaime – Teaching Sociology, 2021
Teaching about sexualities and the LGBTQ+ movement today is full of pitfalls and possibilities. While growing acceptance of at least some segments of the LGBTQ+ community means students are more open to talking about these issues than ever before, two serious barriers remain: (1) The rise of Trump has empowered antagonistic students to utilize the…
Descriptors: Sexuality, LGBTQ People, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Diversity
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Mattson, Greggor – Teaching Sociology, 2021
Teaching topics that implicate student identities, traumas, and/or activism is challenging because students often come with very personal attachments to curricular and extracurricular topics, such as in courses on sexualities, race, gender, and/or social movements. These classes may be described as "wobbly," responding to outside events…
Descriptors: Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Peer Teaching, Cooperative Learning, Goal Orientation
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Bedera, Nicole – Teaching Sociology, 2021
As sociology instructors increasingly include materials on sexual violence in their courses, both instructors and students express anxieties over how best to handle such sensitive conversations. This article critically examines the conventional advice to offer a trigger warning, which can interfere with student education (e.g., requiring survivors…
Descriptors: Violence, Sexual Abuse, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Victims